Ghanaians must be proud by now, as yesterday was a good day for every Ghanaian. Watching the Black Stars of Ghana hammer the record continental champions by nearly as many goals as the Egyptian have won African titles was priceless.

Granted, 6-1 is not the heaviest win Ghana have chalked in recent memory. Sometime last year, we did beat Lesotho in an earlier Brazil 2014 qualifier at the same venue – the Baba Yara Stadium – 7-0, yet it never felt the same, partly due to a prolonged black-out that took some shine off that result and the strength of the opposition.

This time, the satisfaction was infinitely greater. Here Ghanaians were, putting Egypt – seven African title winners – to the sword, with remnants of the old guard Asamoah Gyan, Sulley Muntari and Michael Essien collectively contributing four strikes, while new boys Christian Atsu and Majeed Waris also getting in among the goals. Somewhere between the six-pack, veteran Egyptian playmaker Mohamed Aboutreika grabbed a goal from the spot that might have sparked dreams of a comeback for the Pharaohs with the scores pegged at 2-1, yet which ultimately proved scant consolation. Ghana had sold Arab nation Egypt its worst Eid-ul-Adha ever.

“Six-to-One,” read the dreamy final scoreline on the jet-black scoreboard , that even the international press could not help but agree that it was indeed one of Ghana’s Best games ever.

According to the Associated Press,

KUMASI, Ghana — Ghana stunned Egypt 6-1 in the first leg of their World Cup playoff on Tuesday, with Asamoah Gyan’s fifth-minute goal kicking off a dominant performance that makes the Black Stars overwhelming favorites to be one of the five African teams in Brazil next year.

Ghana captain Gyan scored in each half, while Egypt captain Wael Gomaa conceded an own goal to underline a disastrous first leg for the visitors. Chasing a first trip to the World Cup in over 20 years, Egypt under former United States coach Bob Bradley had appeared on course for a long-awaited qualification by battling through two years of violent unrest at home to make the final 10-team playoffs. The record seven-time African champion has only played in two previous World Cups.

But Ghana, the 2010 World Cup quarterfinalist and Africa’s best-performing team three years ago, was way too strong at home at Baba Yara Stadium in Kumasi to put itself in prime position to progress, even with Egypt’s home leg to come next month.

Bradley said it was now “nearly impossible” for Egypt to qualify.

It’s still unclear where that second game will be played after Egypt initially said it would be in Cairo and in front of fans, the first international held in the capital in two years. FIFA, on Ghana’s request, is still reviewing security arrangements for the deciding leg.

“We still have 90 more minutes to determine whether we play in Brazil or not,” Ghana midfielder Andre Ayew said. “What we have achieved with this scoreline is to have one foot in Brazil. We need to complete it in the next match when we play in Egypt.”

After struggling badly at the start, Egypt responded through a 41st-minute penalty by Mohamed Aboutrika to narrow the margin to 2-1, only for an unrelenting Ghana to respond with four more goals.

Majeed Waris put the home team two goals clear again just before halftime, and Gyan scored his second soon after the break. Sulley Muntari added a penalty in the 72nd and a last-minute strike by substitute Christian Atsu ensured Ghana will take a seemingly insurmountable lead into the second leg on Nov. 19.

Ghana coach Kwesi Appiah said simply: “We played well.”

Gyan scored with a right-footed shot inside five minutes for the early lead and Egypt goalkeeper Sheri Ekramy had to make sharp saves to deny the Ghanaians another two goals in the first 20 minutes. Ekramy was helpless when Gomaa deflected Michael Essien’s shot into the net in the 22nd.

Mohamed Salah was fouled to set up Aboutrika’s penalty just before halftime, only for Waris’ header to make it 3-1 three minutes later.

Gyan struck for his second with another header in the 53rd, Muntari scored the fifth from the spot after Waris was fouled with 20 minutes to go and Atsu’s powerful shot with a minute left capped a surprisingly one-sided game after Egypt was the only team to win all six of its group matches in Africa’s qualifying competition.

Ivory Coast and Nigeria won their first legs this weekend, Cameroon drew 0-0 in Tunisia and Algeria had a narrow 3-2 defeat in Burkina Faso. Should Ghana, Ivory Coast, Nigeria, Cameroon and Algeria qualify, as appears likely, Brazil will host the same five African countries that made the last World Cup.